White v. Cherry

2 S.W.2d 1060, 220 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 643
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 1060 (White v. Cherry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Cherry, 2 S.W.2d 1060, 220 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 643 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Reversing.

J. W. Butt died unmarried, a resident of Warren connty, in December, 1925, leaving a will by which he devised his entire estate to his niece, Ida B. White. The estate was of value about $50,000. He had two half-sisters, the daug-hters of his mother by a second marriage, Mrs. Maggie Cherry and Mrs. Mattie P. Gualtney. Mrs. Cherry had nine children. Mrs. Gualtney had two, Mrs. Ida B. White and Mrs. Maggie Holland. Mrs. Cherry filed this action contesting the will. On the trial of the case, the jury returned a verdict against the will. The contestees appeal.

It is earnestly insisted for the appellants that there was no evidence of mental incapacity or undue influence sufficient to take the case to the jury, and that on the evidence the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the will. The testator was 82 years old. He had lived most of his life on a farm six miles from Bowling Green where his mother had lived. He sold that farm and bought another near by. He sold his farm in 1919, and in December of that year moved to Bowling Green. For about a year he lived there with Mrs. Holland and her husband, Pleamon Holland. His niece, Mrs. White, and her mother had up to this time lived with him on the farm since the death of Mrs. White’s husband in 1902. When he moved to Bowling Green, Mrs. White went to Louisville to live. Her mother lived with him at Holland’s for about a year. He paid $1,000 on the purchase of Holland’s house. In about a year Mrs. White returned from Louisville, and he then bought a house on Broadway and moved to it, living there with Mrs. White and her mother until his death. In the spring of 1923 he sent for Byron Renfrow, who had for many years been *666 Ms attorney, and had him to write Ms will, which was dnly executed and placed in his box at the bank for safekeeping. By this will he devised to each of his nieces a legacy, giving Mrs. White $2,000 more than any of the others, and devised the rest of his estate equally to Ms two half-sisters. He made S. M. Matlock the executor of the will. About eight months later he sent again for Renfrow and told him that he wanted to change his will; that Matlock had not treated him right, and he wanted to make Mrs. White the executor of the will. The will was then rewritten by Renfrow, making no change in it except to substitute Mrs. White for Matlock as executor. In the fall of 1923, he had a spell of sickness and lost the use of his left side; his tongue was affected and he talked with difficulty. But later he got better and went about again. In the fall of the next year he was sick again, but after this got out again. On February 6, 1925, he went to the office of T. W. Thomas, who had attended to some legal matters for him before, and there had the will in contest written, giving all the property to Ida B. WMte and making her the executrix without bond. Nobody was present at this time but Mr. Thomas and his stenographer. Op to his death he managed his property, which consisted of the lending of money and collecting interest. He was quite deaf, but was fond of talking and joking. Mr. Renfrow states that he was competent to make a will in 1923, when he wrote the first will, but that he did not think him competent to make a will when he wrote the second will, and that he only wrote it because it made no change in the first will, except to change the executor, and he did not think that very material. He had known him intimately for many years and says that at this time he did not think he was in a very good mental condition, and that he frequently would say, “I haven’t got any sense,” and that he had an unfounded impression that Matlock had defrauded him.

Pleamond Holland testified that he lived one square from the testator, and was at his house daily. He said in 1924 he had Bright’s disease; that his feet were swollen, he would have crazy spells, he would miss his footing; that he would stick his fork around and put the fork to his mouth while eating, and there would be nothing on his fork; he would sit at the table and go to sleep ;'and that he was flighty at times. He took the testator to Ren *667 frow’s office when the first will was written, and that before they left the house Mrs. White said to him:

‘ ‘ That will will not stand; he is crazy half of the time and don’t know what he is doing.’ ’

He also says she twice told him this afterward. He testified that during1 the last year of his life the testator was not capable of trading or of attending to any business at all, and did not know anything about what his estate-was worth; that three of his cousins had been crazy; and that Mrs. White said she feared that he would, like them, lose his mind -entirely. Put in. narrative form, Holland made these statements as to the testator’s condition:

‘ ‘ The early part of the winter of 1922 he had 'a kind of paralytic stroke, and it lasted him. He never got out as well as I remember until the 1st of April, 1923. He was practically paralyzed, all on one side,, so he could not handle himself well at all. I fixed a way for him so he could get up and down when he-wanted to. I fixed a rope in the ceiling to hang down by the bed by the side of him, and he could get hold of the rope and work himself out of the bed, and that is the way he got back. I would go every day to see after him and see if there was anything T could do for him. In the fall of 1924 his condition got pretty bad for a few days. He was there on the back porch, and he had a kind of crazy spell and couldn’t talk so that you could understand, and he didn’t have mind enough to know what he was doing; that got the women excited, and they sent for me and I went; he wanted me to hunt papers and search the drawers and things and when he would get them they would not be the right ones. We worried a good while with him and he got still and sleepy and went to sleep, and he was a little flighty then for several days, and it finally wore off of him. These spells would come back on him from time to- time and last for several days at -a time_in the last two years of his life. If he just got still, he- would be asleep; sometimes he would go sound asleep and you talking to him. His feet were swollen so that he had to wear -slippers, and for six months there he couldn’t get on a shoe. During the last year of his life he wasn’t capable of-trading or attending to business at all.”

*668 W. T. Hines was the vice president of the American National Bank; Mr. Matlock was the president. Mr. Hines would get out the testator’s box for him when he came to the bank and would assist him in finding papers that he wanted. A number of times after 1923 he would come in and seem to stare off into empty space, and would go off in a sleep sometimes, and sometimes break out in a laugh; that he didn’t have any conception of what he had in his box and had an unfounded notion that Mr. Matlock had not treated him right.

This testimony was confirmed by the testimony of several other witnesses, who knew the testator well, and from his acts and conversation testified that he did not have mind enough to know his property and his obligation to the objects of his bounty and to dispose of his property according to a fixed prupose of his own after his last sickness in the fall of 1924.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 1060, 220 Ky. 664, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-cherry-kyctapphigh-1927.